Diseases of Plants
Diseases of Plants Diseases of Plants, deviations from the normal growth and development of plants incited by microorganisms, parasitic flowering plants, nematodes, viruses, or adverse environmental conditions. In the United States alone, known plant diseases attributable to these causes are estimated to number more than 25,000; the estimated annual losses therefrom add up to several billion dollars. Injuries to plant life due primarily to insects, mites, or animals other than nematodes are not regarded as plant diseases. BACTERIA-INDUCED DISEASES -> Bacterial diseases are marked by various symptoms, including soft rot, leaf spot, wilt of leaves and stems, canker, leaf and twig blight, and gall formation. Fire blight, a disease of apple and pear trees, is historically interesting because it was the first plant disease in which a bacterium was shown to be the inciting agent. Infected trees exhibit a blackening of the flowers, leaves, and twigs, and the disease finally may involve the